Post on 28-Jul-2020
↘ DR. IRIS MUTH | German Federal Ministry for
Family Affairs, Senior Citizens, Women and Youth
29th May 2018: World Congress on Justice for Children
Workshop “Building resilience to radicalisation and violent extremism”
↘ INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE in the context of the German G20 Presidency 2017 „Preventing Radicalisation - Towards Resilient Societies“ (13th – 15th November 2017)
↘ RESULTS: THE EXPERTS’ RECOMMENDATIONS
↘ understand the target group
↘ build capacities among youngsters
↘ (limits to) international cooperation
↘ CONCLUSION
↘ GERMAN PROGRAMME “LIVE DEMOCRACY!”
↘ CREDITS
AGENDA
INTERNATIONAL
CONFERENCE
PARTICIPANTS ↘ Objective: Bring together preventions practitioners, academics, and government officials
↘ Participants have been recommended by their country’s G20 Sherpa, German embassies, civil society
organisations and international networks (e.g. Radicalisation Awareness Network)
↘ 100 Participants from 21 G20 member states and partner countries plus 8 experts from Austria,
Denmark, Lebanon, Pakistan, Sweden, and the United Arab Emirates
↘ Main challenge: Diverse backgrounds of participants
↘ differences regarding the radicalisation phenomena (e.g. right-wing extremisms, religious
radicalisation)
↘ differences regarding the roles and capabilities of the respective governments
↘ differences regarding the magnitude and capacities of civil society actors
INTERNATIONAL
CONFERENCE
PROCESS ↘ KEYNOTES
gave introductions into the main topics and proposed theses
↘ 5 PANELS
discussed prevention and disengagement approached in different sectors
↘ PODIUM DISCUSSION
built upon the panel results and clustered recurring topics across panels
↘ BREAK OUT SESSIONS
discussed thematic clusters and developed recommendations for practitioners and government officials
↘ ON-SITE VOTING
on the recommendations that were developed during the break out sessions
RESULTS
EXPERTS’ RECOMMENDATIONS ↘ SEE CHAIR’S SUMMARY
↘ Understand the target group
↘ Strengthen resilience and build capacities among youngsters
↘ Define roles and responsibilities of stakeholders
↘ Identify and build key competencies among stakeholders
↘ Ensure effective collaboration
↘ Build an inclusive dialogue on grievances
RESULTS
UNDERSTAND THE TARGET GROUP ↘ PAY ATTENTION TO INDIVIDUALS
radicalisation is not a linear process -> identify possibilities for different pathways, junctions etc.
how to address radicalised youngsters depends on their background -> analyse carefully for each
individual
individuals should not be reduced to their radical ideologies -> reach them through other interests
↘ FUND OR PERFORM RESEARCH
little knowledge on long-term factors of radicalisation -> identify risk and protective factors in (early)
childhood
↘ PROVIDE SUPPORT IN LIFE-CHANGING MOMENTS
young people are especially vulnerable to extremism in life-changing moments -> provide resources for
support
people change over time -> steady counselling and permanent contact persons needed (e.g. in prison and
thereafter)
RESULTS
BUILD CAPACITIES AMONG YOUNGSTERS ↘ EMPOWER IN CRITICAL THINKING
we cannot impose the ‘good’ ideologies -> strengthen youngsters to question ideologies
messenger needs to be credible and authentic -> create open spaces for youngsters
people question own beliefs if exposed to cognitive conflicts -> bring youngsters together with other social
groups
↘ SUPPORT DIGITAL LITERACY
youngster should be able to recognise propaganda online -> keep pace with sophisticated propaganda
tools
↘ FACILITATE PEER-TO-PEER SUPPORT
anti-radicalisation messenger needs to be credible and authentic -> facilitate opportunities for peer-to-peer
support
prevention campaigns tend to be perceived as moralising -> allow youngsters to develop their own
campaign
RESULTS
(LIMITS TO) INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION ↘ BUILD NETWORKS OF PRACTITIONERS
prevention approaches are constantly modified -> practitioners should exchange ideas and experiences
↘ PAY ATTENTION TO LOCAL CONTEXTS
reasons for radicalisation differ between contexts as are prevention actors -> analyse local contexts
carefully prevention approaches are highly dependent on the local context -> adapt approaches to your
context
↘ GATHER AND COMPARE RESEARCH RESULTS
research results are contingent to the context analysed -> perform research in different contexts
CONCLUSION
THE KEY (TO BASICALLY ALL OF IT): SUPPORT CIVIL SOCIETY ↘ GOVERNMENT IS LIMITED
far away from the target group
unfamiliar with local needs
inauthentic
↘ DIVERSITY OF PREVENTION STAKEHOLDERS multipliers have important roles, especially families, teachers, and youth workers and hence need to be supported
community-based grassroots “organisations” can help implementing prevention strategies locally and hence need to be
supported
all relevant prevention stakeholders should be included in the design period of prevention programmes
↘ NEED FOR LONG-TERM FUNDING in order to build lasting relationships, stable personnel is needed
in order to understand the target group and notice ongoing radicalisation, training is needed
in order to build local networks, ensure stable personnel and training, long-term funding is needed
GERMAN
PROGRAMME
“LIVE DEMOCRACY!” ↘ FUNDING
115 Mio. Euro has been made available in 2018
funding of civic engagement and democratic practice
funding period of up to 5 years
↘ LOCAL LEVEL 265 Towns, cities, municipalities, districts
competence and coordination units
action and initiative funds
participation, public relations and networking
youth participation via youth funds
GERMAN
PROGRAMME
“LIVE DEMOCRACY!” ↘ FEDERAL STATE LEVEL
federal state-wide coordination, networking and counselling
network of counselling and support services
mobile counselling and victims‘ counselling services
disengagement and exit counselling
↘ FEDERAL LEVEL funding of structural Development of 36 nation-wide NGOs
development of a nation-wide infrastructure with nation-wide
impact
professional, pedagogical, and methodological expertise
exchange and networking at the national and international level
GERMAN
PROGRAMME
“LIVE DEMOCRACY!” ↘ PILOT PROJECTS
95 pilot projects on selected phenomena of group-related-hate
82 pilot projects on prevention of radicalisation
38 pilot projects on online engagement– against online hate
speech
16 pilot projects on prevention in prisons an probationary services
GERMAN
PROGRAMME
“LIVE DEMOCRACY!” ↘ CONCEPTUAL APPROACH TOWARDS PREVENTION OF RADICALISATION
↘ holistic understanding of prevention
↘ potential-oriented (instead of deficit-oriented) pedagogical approaches
↘ well-interlinked relevant actors and stakeholders at all levels
↘ strengthening civil society structures for more sustainability
↘ inclusion of the Muslim community and Muslim stakeholders
↘ peer-group-approach
↘ field-testing of approaches on online-prevention work and social media
↘ special focus on disadvantaged and (social) conflict-driven neighbourhoods
↘ disengagement approaches tailored towards specific target-groups
↘ counselling services for parents, family and friends of radicalised young people
CREDITS
THANKS TO … PROF. PETER NEUMANN, International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation, King's College London | PROF. MICHAELA KÖTTIG, Faculty of Health and Social Work, Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences | PROF. TORE BJØRGO, Center for Research on Extremism, University of Oslo | JUDY KORN, Violence Prevention Network, Germany | ALEXANDER RITZMANN, European Foundation for Democracy, Germany | STEFFEN EISENTRAUT, jugenschutz.net, Germany | H. E. Dr. ALI RASHID AL NUAIMI, Hedayah, United Arabic Emirates | MICHAELA GLASER, German Youth Institute, Germany | PAUL SMITH, Prevent programme, United Kingdom | FLORIAN ENDRES, Federal Office for Migration and Refugees Advice Center on Radicalisation, Germany | DR. EDIT SCHLAFFER, Women without Boders , Austria | EELCO KESSELS, Global Center on Cooperative Security, USA | IAN ACHESON, Sampson Hall Ltd., United Kingdom | KHANH DU DINH, Center for the Prevention of Radicalization Leading to Violence, Canada | VIDHYA RAMALINGAM, Moonshot CVE, United Kingdom | KHADIJE NASSER, Institute for Strategic Dialogue, Lebanon | MAQSOUD KRUSE, Hedayah, United Arab Emirates | JONATHAN BIRDWELL, Institute for Strategic Dialogue, United Kingdom | J. M. BERGER, International Centre for Counter-Terrorism, Netherlands | DR. ANNELI BOTHA, University of the Free State, South Africa | DR. MARLEN DE LA CHAUX, National Center for Crime Prevention, Germany | PROF. LORNE DAWSON, Canadian Network for Research on Terrorism, Security and Society, Canada | ANNA PARLE, Victorian State Government, Australia
AND TO ALL PARTICIPANTS WHO SHARED THEIR
EXPERTISE!